Please write all of the necessary information and provide page references. Beothuk Habitation Information:

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Please write all of the necessary information and provide page references. Beothuk Bands of 30-55 people Seasonal lifestyle: coastline in the summer and winter they moved inland Lived in mamateeks (winter and summer) Avalon Peninsula, Red Indian Lake Made their own clothing from animal skins No European clothing/blankets Used red ochre for their life-giving power Fish ex. salmon Seals Caribou Fur-bearing animals Berries Birds such as ducks Migrated from season to season Stole tools/useful items from white men Very shy Mamateek cone shaped tent covered with sheets of birch bark Shanawdithit 1829 Demasduit also known as Mary March 1 Page References: pages 26-28

Question #1: Extinction of the Beothuk Read page 28 and give four reasons why the Beothuk went extinct. Complete the question in the space provided: Reason One The Beothuk were forced to move off their land by the Europeans - lost their hunting and fishing grounds. The result was starvation. Reason Two The Beothuk were killed by white people because they wanted the hunting/fishing grounds, and because they were angry with the Beothuk who stole from them. Reason Three They were exposed to new diseases such as TB. They couldn't fight these diseases off. Reason Four Beothuk had bows & arrows, the white settlers had guns. As a result, the Beothuk could not defend themselves & slowly died off.

Mi kmaq Codroy Valley (West Coast) Conne River (South River) Badger and Glenwood (Central) Gander (East) Lived in traditional dwellings cone shaped tent covered in skins or birch Mix of European and aboriginal (picture page 29) Traded clothing Fishing Hunting Gathering Caribou, moose, beaver, bear, herring, shellfish Based on oral tradition Lived in NL before European settlers Fur traders with the Europeans Guides for Europeans Many converted to Roman Catholicism Lifestyle: way a person or group lives Ktaqmkuk: name for Nl, means land across the water Miawpukek: Conne River First nations Sylvester Joe: Mi kmaq guide 2 Page References: page 29

Innu Occupied parts of what are now Quebec and Labrador A migratory lifestyle Skin tents Made their own clothing for centuries (animal skins) Traded later with Europeans and wore European clothing Mushuau Branch: beaver, caribou,bear, porcupine and lakefish (stayed in one area) Sheshatshiu Branch: primarily caribou (traveled large distances) One branch traveled a lot in one area and the other branch traveled over long distances following caribou Migratory lifestyle Started hunting to get pelts for the fur trade in exchange for European goods. Couldn t get enough food for to keep from starving which got worse when the caribou herds declined. Natuashish and Sheshatshiu main Innu communities Nitassinan: name for Innu territory our land 3 Page References: page 30-31

Inuit Have lived in Labrador for hundreds of years Very similar culture/language to Inuit in other parts of Canada Wore handmade clothing made of seal skin and caribou hides- insulated to deal with cold temperature Later incorporated European clothing in with their own Artic char (fish) Caribou Seals Whale Seabirds Walrus Stored food in rock caches (winter/early spring)*mound of rocks in which they would put food. Traveled by dog team, kayak, umiak Skin tent in the summer/sod house (qamartalik) in winter Very family centered culture Pre-contact- nomadic Umiak-larger boat Tupiq summer skin tent Qamartalik winter sod house Inuktitut- language of the Inuit Page References: 31-32 4

Labrador Métis Lived farther south in Labrador than the Inuit Mix of European and aboriginal but mainly European style May have some clothing of skins/fur Hunted birds Seal Fur bearing animals such as fox,bear,lynx Caribou Salmon Cod Mixed aboriginal/european heritage Worked as trappers/small traders Developed their own social customs Kablunangajuit- almost white man Metis people of mixed Aboriginal and European ancestory-usually aboriginal women and European men. 5 Page References: 33

Question #2: The Influence of the Europeans on the Inuit How did the Inuit lifestyle change with the arrival of the Moravians and the other Europeans? Give three supports. Read pages 31 and 32. 1. Inuit had contact with the European settlers through the Moravian Church Missionaries. Many Inuit people changed their life to be more like the missionaries. They were no longer traveling (nomadic life), they stayed close to the mission stations (Nain, Okak) and celebrated holidays like Christmas & Easter; many changed Religion by converting to Christianity. 2. Over fishing by American and European whalers led to the end of the whaling fishery for the Inuit, and created a greater reliance on sealing. 3. The cod fishery and fur trapping was a new commercial activity that came with the settlers. The Inuit began to participate, but the hunting required a need for European goods like, guns, traps & some clothing. These required the Inuit to move away from making all their own materials & using more of the European goods.